Scientific NameCimex lectularius (common bed bug)
ClassificationOrder Hemiptera, Family Cimicidae
Size4–5mm adult (apple seed); 1mm egg (mustard seed)
ColorReddish-brown; yellowish-translucent as nymphs
ShapeFlat, oval; swells and darkens after feeding
LifespanUp to 1 year; can survive 300 days without feeding
DietBlood only — human host preferred
Active Season in OklahomaYear-round; activity increases April through October
Threat LevelHigh — rapid reproduction, significant psychological impact, difficult to eliminate without professional treatment
Common in OKC MetroYes — apartments, hotels, university housing, multi-family properties, single-family homes

Bed bugs are one of the most stressful pest problems an Oklahoma homeowner or renter can face. They are small, secretive, and extremely good at hiding — but they leave behind a trail of evidence that a trained eye can find. Once established, a single female can produce hundreds of offspring in a matter of months, turning a minor problem into a full infestation before most people realize what they are dealing with.

Oklahoma City has ranked among the country’s top 50 most bed bug-infested cities. The combination of a large transient population, extensive hotel and hospitality infrastructure, and dense multi-family housing in areas like Midtown, Capitol Hill, and along I-35 create the conditions bed bugs need to spread. They do not care how clean or well-maintained a home is — they follow people, not filth.

Alpha Pest Solutions serves homeowners, renters, property managers, and businesses across the OKC metro. If you think you have bed bugs, the fastest path to resolution starts with a thorough inspection. Call (405) 977-0678 for a free inspection.

Identifying Bed Bugs in Oklahoma

Adult bed bugs are roughly the size of an apple seed — about 4 to 5 millimeters long and 1.5 to 2 millimeters wide. They are flat and oval when unfed, which allows them to squeeze into any space where a credit card can fit: mattress seams, baseboards, electrical outlet covers, picture frame edges, and drawer joints. After feeding, a bed bug swells into a more elongated, balloon-like shape and turns a deeper red.

Color varies by life stage and recent feeding. Unfed adults are reddish-brown. Nymphs (juveniles) are smaller and nearly translucent to yellowish-white, making them very difficult to spot without magnification on pale surfaces. Eggs are white, about 1mm long — roughly the size of a mustard seed.

Bed bugs have no wings and do not jump. They move by crawling, covering several feet per minute when motivated.

Bed Bugs vs. The Most Confused Species

Bat bugs (Cimex adjunctus) are nearly identical to bed bugs under casual inspection. The key visual difference is leg hair length — bat bugs have longer fringe hairs on the upper thorax. This matters because bat bugs that lose their bat host (after a bat exclusion, for example) will seek out humans and bite. Misidentifying bat bugs as bed bugs leads to repeated failed treatments. Alpha Pest confirms species before recommending treatment.

Bird mites are much smaller than bed bugs, barely visible to the naked eye, and move fast across skin. They are associated with active bird nests, not mattresses or furniture.

Carpet beetle larvae are fuzzy, carrot-shaped, and roughly 2–4mm long. They do not bite, but their shed hairs cause allergic skin reactions that many people mistake for bed bug bites.

Fleas are dark brown, jump visibly, and prefer pets and floor-level areas. Flea bites concentrate around ankles and lower legs. Bed bug bites tend to appear on exposed skin at bed level — arms, shoulders, neck, face.

See the Bed Bug vs. Bat Bug vs. Bird Mite comparison page for a detailed side-by-side guide.

Types of Bed Bugs Found in Oklahoma

Common Bed Bug (Cimex lectularius) — the species responsible for virtually all infestations in Oklahoma. It evolved alongside human populations in temperate climates and has been documented in every Oklahoma county. This is the species you are dealing with in OKC metro homes, apartments, hotels, and businesses.

Tropical Bed Bug (Cimex hemipterus) — found in subtropical and tropical regions. Occasionally documented in warmer parts of the southern United States but not established in Oklahoma. If identified, it requires the same treatment approach as the common bed bug.

For all practical purposes in Oklahoma, Cimex lectularius is the bed bug you are facing.

Diet, Behavior, and Habitat

Bed bugs feed exclusively on blood. They strongly prefer humans but will feed on other warm-blooded animals — dogs, cats, birds, and rodents — if human hosts are unavailable. They are attracted to body heat, carbon dioxide exhaled during sleep, and certain chemical cues.

Feeding happens during the night or in low-light conditions. A full feeding takes 3 to 10 minutes. The bed bug injects both an anesthetic (so the host does not feel the bite) and an anticoagulant (to keep blood flowing) during feeding. After feeding, it retreats to its harborage and does not need to feed again for 5 to 7 days.

In well-established infestations, bed bugs move outward from the primary harborage (typically the mattress and bed frame) into surrounding furniture, walls, and eventually adjacent rooms or units. In multi-unit housing — apartments, college dormitories, hotels — they travel through wall voids, under doorways, and along plumbing chases.

Bed bugs are not seasonal in the traditional sense. They are active year-round indoors where temperatures stay above 55°F. They do not go dormant in winter and do not die from typical Oklahoma winter cold inside a heated home.

Life Cycle and Reproduction

Bed bugs undergo incomplete metamorphosis with three stages: egg, nymph, and adult. Understanding the life cycle is critical to understanding why treatment requires multiple visits.

Eggs are laid individually or in small clusters in protected areas — mattress seams, wood crevices, behind headboards, along baseboards. A female lays 1 to 10 eggs per day and up to 500 eggs over her lifetime. Eggs are glued to surfaces with a sticky secretion and hatch in 6 to 17 days depending on temperature.

Nymphs pass through five instars (growth stages) before reaching adulthood. Each instar requires at least one blood meal before molting to the next stage. Nymphs shed their exoskeleton (cast skin) at each stage — these pale, translucent husks are one of the key signs of an active infestation. The cast skins remain intact and hold the shape of the nymph.

Adult development from egg takes as little as 37 days at warm temperatures (above 72°F) and can stretch to four months in cooler conditions. In Oklahoma’s climate, where homes stay warm year-round, development is continuous. Adults live up to one year and can survive approximately 300 days without a blood meal under cool conditions.

Reproduction rate in practical terms: One pregnant female introduced into a home can produce 200 to 500 offspring in her lifetime. At 37 days per generation, a minor infestation becomes a major one within two to three months if untreated.

What Attracts Bed Bugs to Oklahoma Homes

Bed bugs do not enter homes the way most pests do. They do not come in from the yard or through foundation cracks. They arrive as hitchhikers — carried in on luggage, secondhand furniture, clothing, or any fabric item that was in a location where bed bugs were present.

Used furniture is one of the highest-risk items. OKC’s active secondhand and estate sale market means upholstered sofas, bed frames, mattresses, and dressers move through many hands. Bed bugs hide in seams and joints that are easy to miss during a casual inspection.

Travel is a major vector. OKC’s central location along I-35 and I-40 — with heavy trucking, tourism, and business travel — means hotels, motels, and extended-stay properties are frequent sources. Bed bugs found in luggage after a trip can establish a home infestation within weeks.

Multi-family housing is the highest-risk residential situation. Shared walls and common areas in apartment complexes, especially in dense areas like Midtown OKC, Capitol Hill, and Del City, allow bed bugs to migrate between units. Under Oklahoma law, property owners are responsible for pest control in buildings with four or more units.

College and student housing around the University of Oklahoma in Norman and Oklahoma City University create rapid spread vectors through shared dorms, study areas, and used textbook purchases.

What does not attract bed bugs: dirty conditions, food waste, moisture, or clutter. A five-star hotel room and a cluttered apartment are equally at risk. Clutter does make treatment harder because it adds hiding spots, but it does not cause an infestation.

Where Bed Bugs Are Found in the OKC Metro

Oklahoma City’s bed bug pressure is concentrated in areas with high housing density and transient populations.

Midtown and Downtown OKC — hotel corridors, boutique properties, and older apartment buildings near Automobile Alley and the Paseo Arts District. The older building stock in these neighborhoods (pre-1960 brick construction) provides abundant harborage in plaster wall voids and wood trim.

Capitol Hill and South OKC — dense multi-family housing with higher tenant turnover. Apartments in these zip codes see some of the highest bed bug call volumes in the metro.

Del City and Midwest City — established neighborhoods with older housing stock and a high proportion of rental units. Bed bugs spread easily in single-story apartment complexes where units share slab foundations.

Norman — University of Oklahoma student housing, off-campus apartments, and the Sooner Road corridor motel row are consistent bed bug sources.

Edmond — newer construction but not immune. Infestations arrive via travel, secondhand furniture purchases, and the OKC-to-Edmond apartment rental pipeline.

Single-family homeowners across the metro are not immune. A child returning from a sleepover, a college student moving home for the summer, or a weekend trip to a Texas hotel can introduce bed bugs into any home.

Where Bed Bugs Hide Inside Homes

Bed bugs stay close to where people sleep. In most infestations, 70 percent or more of the population is concentrated within a few feet of the bed.

Primary harborage (where to look first):

  • Mattress seams, piping, tufts, and tags
  • Box spring fabric seams and interior frame
  • Bed frame joints, screw holes, and corners
  • Headboard — both the front face and the wall side

Secondary harborage (as the infestation grows):

  • Nightstands and dresser drawers — seams, joints, and the underside
  • Upholstered chairs and sofas in the bedroom
  • Baseboards and carpet edge along the bed wall
  • Electrical outlet covers and switch plates within 6 feet of the bed
  • Picture frames and wall hangings adjacent to the bed
  • Loose wallpaper and wall panel gaps

In heavy infestations:

  • Behind wall outlet covers in other rooms
  • Inside electronics (clock radios, laptops, phone chargers)
  • Closets — seams of garments, shoe soles, folded linens
  • Adjacent rooms and, in multi-unit housing, neighboring units

One thing that reliably tells a trained inspector where the infestation is centered: the fecal spotting pattern. Fecal spots appear densest at the primary harborage and decrease with distance.

Signs of a Bed Bug Infestation

Bite marks on skin — often the first thing homeowners notice. Bites appear as small, red, swollen welts, sometimes in a line or clustered pattern, typically on skin that was exposed during sleep: arms, shoulders, neck, and face. About 20 to 70 percent of people show no visible reaction at all. The absence of visible bites does not mean there are no bed bugs.

Fecal spots — small dark spots, approximately 1 to 2mm, that look like dried ink or a felt-tip pen mark on fabric. They bleed and spread slightly on fabric surfaces. Fresh spots have a faint rusty odor. These appear on mattress seams, box spring fabric, headboards, and baseboards nearest the bed.

Cast skins (shed exoskeletons) — pale, translucent shells that hold the exact shape of the nymph. Each nymph sheds five times. Finding multiple cast skins indicates an actively reproducing population. They accumulate along mattress seams, in wood joints, and in corners of the bed frame.

Blood stains on sheets and pillowcases — small rust-colored smears from crushed fed bed bugs or from bites that continued to bleed after the bug withdrew.

Live bed bugs — flat, reddish-brown insects visible in mattress seams during daytime if disturbed. Fed bugs are rounder and darker. Nymphs are much smaller and easier to miss.

Musty odor — in established infestations, a sweet, musty scent from the scent glands builds up in the room. It is faint at first and intensifies as the population grows. Pest professionals recognize this smell immediately.

How to Tell If the Infestation Is Active

The flashlight and credit card test: Using a bright flashlight, work slowly along every mattress seam and press a credit card flat against the seam, dragging it along the edge. Live bugs, cast skins, eggs, and fecal spotting will be exposed. Do this on both sides of the mattress, then repeat on the box spring.

Sticky trap placement: Place interceptor traps under each bed leg. These funnel-style plastic devices trap bed bugs attempting to climb onto or off of the bed. Check traps after 3 to 5 nights. Even one bed bug in a trap confirms active presence.

Check the room perimeter: Run your finger along baseboards within 6 feet of the bed. Fecal spotting on baseboards indicates the infestation has spread beyond the bed.

Document what you find: Photograph any evidence — fecal spots, cast skins, live bugs. This documentation is useful for your pest professional, your landlord if applicable, and for tracking treatment progress.

If you find physical evidence — fecal spots, cast skins, live bugs, or blood stains — stop the inspection and call Alpha Pest Solutions at (405) 977-0678. Do not begin any treatment yourself until you speak with a professional. Improper treatment disperses the population and makes professional treatment harder.

Bed Bug Season in Oklahoma

Unlike most pests, bed bugs have no true outdoor season because they live entirely indoors. However, certain patterns emerge in the OKC metro:

Spring and Summer (April through September) — peak introduction season. Increased travel, hotel stays, summer break for college students moving in and out of housing, garage sale and estate sale season for secondhand furniture. New infestations are most commonly introduced during these months.

Fall (October through November) — early discovery season. As the weather cools, people spend more time indoors and in bed. Bites that went unnoticed during active summer months get noticed when routines slow down. Pest companies in OKC consistently see an uptick in bed bug calls in October.

Winter (December through February) — infestations continue and grow indoors. A bed bug population established in late summer is fully entrenched by winter. Cold weather has no effect on bed bugs inside a heated home.

There is no month in Oklahoma where bed bugs go dormant or where the risk drops to zero. Year-round vigilance matters, especially in multi-unit housing.

Health Risks

Bed bugs are not known to transmit diseases to humans. The CDC, EPA, and OSDH all confirm that no pathogen transmission to humans has been documented under natural infestation conditions.

Bite reactions vary widely. About 20 to 70 percent of people have no visible skin reaction. Others develop small, flat red spots. In some cases, bites cause pronounced swelling, painful welts, vesicles (fluid-filled bumps), or, in rare cases, anaphylaxis. Reactions worsen with repeated exposures.

Secondary skin infections develop when bite sites are scratched. Impetigo, ecthyma, and lymphangitis have all been documented as secondary complications from bed bug bites.

Psychological impact is severe and well-documented. Chronic bed bug infestation is strongly associated with insomnia, anxiety, social withdrawal, and post-traumatic stress symptoms. People often stop having guests, avoid sleeping at home, and experience significant mental health strain. These effects can persist even after the infestation is resolved.

Anemia — rare, but documented in cases of severe, prolonged infestation where a large population feeds on a single host repeatedly.

A note on bite misdiagnosis: Several common medications and supplements cause skin reactions that can be mistaken for bed bug bites. High-dose niacin (vitamin B3) causes a “niacin flush” — generalized skin redness, itching, and a burning sensation that can look like an allergic bite response. Anticoagulant medications can cause skin bruising and sensitivity at minor irritation sites. Some antihistamines, when discontinued, cause rebound itching. If bites are appearing without physical evidence of bed bugs (no fecal spots, no cast skins, no live bugs on inspection), these reactions are worth discussing with a physician. Alpha Pest Solutions requires confirmed physical evidence before recommending treatment — this protects our customers from unnecessary pesticide exposure.

Treatment Process

Why Evidence Matters Before Treatment

Alpha Pest Solutions does not treat for bed bugs without confirmed physical evidence of an active infestation. This is not a formality — it is a core part of how we protect our customers. Treating a home that does not have bed bugs wastes money and exposes your family to pesticides unnecessarily. It also does nothing to address the real source of whatever is causing your symptoms.

If you call us with suspected bed bug activity, we conduct a thorough inspection first. If we find confirmed physical evidence, we move to treatment. If we do not, we tell you that honestly and help you figure out what else might be going on.

See our Delusory Parasitosis page if you are experiencing persistent sensations or bite-like reactions without confirmed evidence.

Why Alpha Pest Solutions Uses Chemical Treatment (Not Heat)

Heat treatment challenges: Heat treatment requires large commercial equipment to raise an entire room or home to 118 degrees Fahrenheit or above for 90 minutes or more. Achieving that uniform temperature in wall voids, inside mattresses, and in structural cavities is genuinely difficult to verify. Electronics, vinyl flooring, candles, medications, certain plastics, and pets cannot be exposed to those temperatures and must be removed before treatment. If the temperature is not uniform — if a wall void stays cool — the survivors repopulate the entire space within weeks. Heat treatment also carries meaningful property damage risk from the equipment and the temperatures themselves.

Why chemical works: A properly executed multi-visit chemical protocol applies EPA-registered insecticides with residual activity to all identified harborage points — mattress seams, box spring interiors, bed frames, baseboards, nightstands, and surrounding furniture. Residual insecticides continue to work for weeks after application, catching nymphs that hatch from eggs after the initial treatment. Multiple visits address the full reproductive cycle. The cost is lower, the prep burden is significantly lighter, and there is no property damage risk from the treatment itself.

Our chemical protocol targets all life stages. It is thorough, transparent, and backed by a follow-up visit schedule that accounts for egg hatch cycles.

The Treatment Process Step by Step

  1. Inspection — A thorough inspection of the bed, surrounding furniture, baseboards, and adjacent areas. We document all harborage points before treatment begins.
  2. Pre-treatment prep instructions — You will receive specific prep instructions: washing and heat-drying all bedding and clothing, decluttering where possible, and vacating the home for 3 to 4 hours after treatment.
  3. Initial chemical application — Application of EPA-registered products to all confirmed and suspected harborage points. Products vary by surface type — crack-and-crevice formulations for joints and frames, residual sprays for baseboards and surrounding areas, dust formulations where appropriate.
  4. Follow-up visit (14 to 21 days) — We return to treat any areas where hatching nymphs from eggs may have survived the initial application. This visit is not optional — it is the step that breaks the reproductive cycle.
  5. Final inspection — Confirm resolution. If activity is still present, we assess and adjust the protocol.

All treatment areas should be vacated for 3 to 4 hours post-application and should not be cleaned or laundered immediately after — residual products need time to work.

Treatment Timeline and Expectations

Most cases are resolved in two visits over 3 to 4 weeks. Here is what to expect:

Days 1 through 5 after first treatment: You may continue to see live bed bugs and experience bites. This is normal. The products are working but bugs that were not directly contacted are still active. Do not re-treat yourself.

Days 6 through 14: Bite frequency and live sightings should decrease. Cast skins and fecal spots will remain — they do not disappear after treatment, they are evidence of what was there. Seeing them does not mean the treatment failed.

Day 14 to 21 — follow-up visit: Your second treatment targets any newly hatched nymphs. This is the most important step for long-term resolution.

Days 21 through 30: The infestation should be fully resolved. Continued activity beyond this point should be reported to us immediately.

Do not purchase secondhand furniture or bring in new fabric items during the treatment period. A re-introduction during active treatment will restart the cycle.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if I have bed bugs or something else biting me?

The only reliable way to confirm bed bugs is physical evidence — fecal spots, cast skins, eggs, or live bugs. Bites alone are not a reliable indicator because they look similar to flea bites, mosquito bites, and allergic skin reactions. Use a flashlight and credit card to check your mattress seams, bed frame joints, and headboard. If you find small dark spots (fecal staining), pale empty shells (cast skins), or small reddish-brown insects, call a professional for inspection.

Can bed bugs live in Oklahoma year-round?

Yes. Bed bugs are indoor pests and Oklahoma’s climate has almost no effect on them. Inside a heated home, they reproduce and feed continuously regardless of season. Oklahoma City winters do not kill bed bugs indoors. Their populations grow continuously if untreated.

Where do bed bugs hide during the day?

Primarily in the mattress seams, box spring interior, bed frame joints, and headboard. As the infestation grows, they spread to nightstands, dresser drawers, baseboards, electrical outlet covers, and eventually into wall voids and adjacent rooms. They stay close to where their human host sleeps.

How fast do bed bugs spread in an Oklahoma apartment?

In a multi-unit building, bed bugs can migrate between adjacent units in weeks through shared wall voids, under doorways, and along plumbing chases. A single infested unit can spread to neighboring units within 30 to 60 days if untreated. Property owners in buildings with four or more units are responsible for pest control under Oklahoma law.

Do bed bugs transmit disease?

No. The CDC and EPA confirm that bed bugs have not been documented to transmit diseases to humans under natural infestation conditions. The health impacts — bite reactions, secondary infections from scratching, and significant psychological stress — are real, but direct disease transmission is not a documented risk.

Why does Alpha Pest Solutions use chemical treatment instead of heat?

Heat requires uniform temperatures throughout every wall void and structural cavity, which is difficult to verify and carries property damage risk. Chemical treatment with residual insecticides provides continued kill activity for weeks, targeting hatching nymphs. It is lower-cost, has less prep burden, and does not risk damage to electronics, flooring, or medications. Our multi-visit protocol accounts for the full egg hatch cycle.

How much does bed bug treatment cost in Oklahoma City?

Bed bug treatment costs in the OKC area typically range from $300 to $1,500 for a professional chemical protocol depending on infestation level and the size of the space being treated. Whole-home heat treatment quotes in the metro typically run $1,500 to $5,000. Alpha Pest Solutions’ chemical protocol is consistently more affordable than heat and produces equal or better outcomes when executed correctly. Contact us for a specific quote after inspection.

Can I treat bed bugs myself with over-the-counter sprays?

Over-the-counter sprays will kill bed bugs they directly contact but have no residual activity, cannot reach eggs, and often scatter the population. Treating with ineffective products before calling a professional makes the infestation harder to resolve because it disperses bugs out of their established harborage and into less accessible areas. We recommend calling for a free inspection before attempting any self-treatment.

How do I prepare my home for bed bug treatment?

Your technician will give you specific instructions. Generally: wash and heat-dry all bedding, clothing, and soft items on the hottest cycle; seal them in bags until treatment is complete; remove clutter from the floor and around the bed; do not move furniture out of the room during treatment (this spreads bugs); and vacate the home for 3 to 4 hours after treatment.

How do I check a hotel room in Oklahoma City for bed bugs?

Pull back the sheets and inspect mattress seams and tags. Lift the mattress and check the box spring seams. Examine the headboard — pull it away from the wall if possible. Check behind nightstands and along the baseboard closest to the bed. If you find dark fecal spots, cast skins, or live insects, request a different room on a non-adjacent floor. Keep your luggage on the luggage rack, not on the bed or floor.

Can I see bed bugs with the naked eye?

Yes. Adults are 4 to 5mm long — visible without magnification under good lighting. Nymphs are smaller and more translucent but visible. Eggs at 1mm are difficult to see without magnification. A flashlight and a credit card dragged slowly along mattress seams and frame joints is the most effective way to expose them.

How long does it take for bed bug bites to show up?

Bite reactions can appear within hours or up to 14 days after a bite occurs. The delay is caused by sensitivity developing with repeated exposure — people who have never been bitten before often do not react at all. This is why infestations are sometimes well-established before the occupant notices.

Why do bed bugs bite some people in a home but not others?

Bed bugs feed on whoever is closest and most accessible. In shared bedrooms, one person may receive most of the bites simply based on their position, body heat output, and carbon dioxide production during sleep. The other person not being bitten does not mean there is no infestation — it may mean the bugs prefer a particular side of the bed.

What should I do if my Oklahoma apartment has bed bugs?

Document the infestation with photos. Report it in writing to your property manager or landlord. Under Oklahoma law, property owners of buildings with four or more units are responsible for pest control. Do not move furniture or clothing to another room or unit — this spreads the infestation. Contact Alpha Pest Solutions at (405) 977-0678. We work with both tenants and property managers.

Can bed bugs come back after professional treatment?

Bed bugs can be reintroduced after successful treatment, just as they were originally introduced. A resolved infestation does not make your home immune. If bites and evidence return after confirmed resolution, the most likely explanation is a re-introduction through secondhand furniture, travel, or a neighbor’s unit. Preventive interceptor traps under bed legs provide early warning.

Are bed bug treatments safe for children and pets?

Alpha Pest Solutions uses EPA-registered products that are safe when applied according to label instructions. We require vacating the home for 3 to 4 hours post-treatment. All treated surfaces should dry completely before re-entry. We will go over any specific concerns about products used with you before treatment begins.

Related Services and Pests

Bed Bug Library: Bed Bugs — Pest Library Hub — all bed bug resources in one place

Services:

  • Bed Bug Treatment — Alpha Pest Solutions’ evidence-based chemical protocol for OKC metro homes and businesses
  • General Pest Control — covers other biting insects that may be present alongside bed bugs

Pest Library — frequently confused with bed bugs:

  • Bed Bug vs. Bat Bug vs. Bird Mite — identification comparison for the three most commonly confused biting pests
  • Carpet Beetle vs. Bed Bug — carpet beetle larvae do not bite but cause bite-like allergic reactions
  • Bat Bug — nearly identical to bed bugs; found after bat roosts; requires different treatment approach
  • Bird Mite — associated with active bird nests; microscopic; causes intense skin irritation
  • Scabies — a parasitic mite infestation requiring medical treatment, not pest control

If physical evidence cannot be confirmed: Delusory Parasitosis — a recognized medical condition involving persistent sensations of biting or crawling without a confirmed infestation. Alpha Pest Solutions treats every uncertain case with respect and honesty.


Bed bugs are one of the most difficult pest problems to resolve without professional help — but with the right protocol, they are fully treatable. Alpha Pest Solutions provides thorough inspections, honest findings, and a proven chemical treatment protocol that works.

If you are seeing bites, suspicious spots on your mattress, or anything else that concerns you, do not wait. The sooner an infestation is identified, the smaller it is, and the faster it resolves.

Call or text (405) 977-0678 to schedule your free inspection. We serve Oklahoma City, Edmond, Norman, Moore, Midwest City, Del City, Yukon, Mustang, Bethany, Nichols Hills, The Village, and all surrounding OKC metro communities, Monday through Friday 8am to 6pm.